The captain of the Costa Concordia cruise ship will face a manslaughter trial in Italy over a crash in which 32 people lost their lives.

The giant vessel crashed into a Tuscan island and keeled over in January 2012.

Francesco Schettino has also been accused of abandoning the ship before all 4,229 people on board had been evacuated.

The trial will be held from July 9 in Grosseto, the city nearest to the site of the tragedy.

Five other suspects in the investigation - four crew members and the head of ship owner Costa Crociere's crisis unit - have requested plea bargains, which are now expected to be approved.

Sentences for the plea bargains, which have been given the go-ahead by prosecutors but require approval from a judge, range between a year and six months and two years and 10 months in prison.

A judge last month said Costa Crociere, the biggest cruise ship operator in Europe and a subsidiary of the US-based giant Carnival Corp, had accepted limited responsibility as the employer of all the suspects and ordered it to pay a fine of 1.0 million euros ($1.3 million) in a decision that was hugely contested by survivors' groups.

The company can still be sued in civil courts.

The giant luxury liner crashed into the island of Giglio just as many passengers were dining on the first night of their Mediterranean cruise, prompting a panicked and chaotic night-time evacuation.

Most of the survivors who did not suffer injuries or lose loved ones have accepted compensation from Costa of around 11,000 euros each.

The ghostly wreck of the liner is still beached on its side just a few dozen metres from the shore of Giglio.

Salvage crews are working flat out to stabilise and refloat the hulk in an unprecedented operation.